Hill, J.
Lester Pullen was served with two subpoenas to attend the July term, 1925, of Whitfield superior court, one to appear before the grand jury and one to attend as a witness in the case of the State v. Dave Sloan, charged with selling, making, and possessing intoxicating liquors. Pullen failed to obey either of these subpoenas. Two rules were issued against him for contempt of court, and the same were served upon him. On the trial of the proceeding for contempt he admitted receiving the subpoenas. The trial judge sentenced him in each case to pay a fine of $200 and to serve 20 days in jail, evidently under the Civil Code of 1910, § 4849 (5). Pullen sued out a writ of habeas corpus against the sheriff of the county; and on the hearing of the habeas corpus proceeding the court remanded Pullen to jail to complete the jail sentence imposed by the court in the contempt cases.
It is insisted by plaintiff in error that the superior court was without power to punish him by both fine and imprisonment under the Civil Code, § 4849, but that if the plaintiff in error can be punished at all it is under § 5852, which provides that “The court may proceed by attachment, to compel the attendance of a witness who fails to obey the precept, and also to punish him by fine not exceeding $300. In addition thereto such a witness shall be liable in damages to the person causing him to be subpoenaed, for his failure to attend.” This section is taken from the judiciary act of 1799 (Acts 1799, p. 26), which declares that “Where it shall appear, in manner aforesaid, that' a witness in any cause shall have been duly summoned, and such witness shall fail to appear, it shall be the duty of the court, on motion, to issue an attachment against such defaulting witness, returnable to the next court, and shall fine such witness in a sum not exceeding $300, unless he or she shall make a sufficient excuse for such non-attendance, which shall be judged of by the.court, but shall nevertheless be subject to the action of the person at whose suit such witness shall *113have been summoned, for any damage which he, she, or they may have sustained by reason of such non-attendance.” It will thus be seen that the judiciary act of 1799, which has been brought forward in all of the codes of this State, and which is embodied in the Civil Code of 1910, § 5852, provides punishment expressly, and only, for witnesses who fail to obey the precept of the court, and the punishment provided by that act is by a fine not exceeding $300. There is no express authority in this act to punish a witness who fails to attend court under precept by imprisonment. Thus we have two sections of the Code (§§ 5852, 4849, par. 5), each providing for a different punishment. Section 4849 declares generally the jurisdiction of the superior courts, and one of these powers is declared, in specification 5 thereof, “to punish contempt by fines not exceeding $200, and by imprisonment not exceeding 20 days.” Where the language in this specification originated the writer has been unable to ascertain; but, whatever its origin, it is now embodied in the Civil Code of 1910, and has the effect of statute law, that Code having been adopted by the legislature. It will be observed that these powers are general; whereas the power conferred by § 5852 applies only to a witness who fails to attend when he has been subpoenaed to appear before the court. There is nothing in the present record to indicate that, after the court had cited the plaintiff in error to appear and answer the rule for contempt for having failed to appear, the witness refused to testify in the ease in which he was cited to appear and to testify. So we are of the opinion that the court exceeded his authority when, in addition to the fine imposed, he also ordered the plaintiff in error to be imprisoned not exceeding 20 days. Having once brought the plaintiff in error before the court, the court had ample authority to require him to attend and to testify by requiring him either to give bond for his appearance at court, or, on the failure to give bond, to imprison him for that purpose.
In the ease of Crosby v. Potts, 8 Ga. App. 463, 466 (69 S. E. 582), Judge Powell, in discussing the inherent powers of the courts to devise ways to compel witnesses to testify, said: “Just how the performance of this duty of giving testimony should be compelled is a matter which from time to time has been the subject of various statutes; but the better view seems to be that it *114has ever been one of the inherent powers of courts to devise ways to compel all persons to perform this testimonial duty, except in so far as they may, for special reasons, have been made exempt from testifying, either generally or specially. We do not think that the contention of counsel is well taken that no power existed at common law by which the courts could compel a' witness to give bail for his appearance at the trial. As Bailey, B., said as to a somewhat similar proposition in the case of Summers v. Moseley, 2 Or. and M. 489, 'prior to that statute [the statute of Elizabeth, supra], there must have been a power in the Crown (for it would have been utterly impossible to carry on the administration of justice without such power) to require .the attendance in courts of justice of persons capable of giving evidence, and the production of documents material to the cause, though in the possession of a stranger.’ The fact that no precedent of a common law court’s having done the precise thing done in this case does not negative the fact that the courts did have the power. As Prof. Wigmore says in his great work on Evidence, speaking along this general line, Tut how culpable is this self-stultifying concession by a court of justice that it knows of no process to execute its powers for enforcing a conceded duty.’ There can not be a precise precedent for everything. Where there is a clearly established principle, the lack of a precedent is no obstacle. There must sometime be a first precedent.” For a discussion of the same general subject see Davis v. Davis, 138 Ga. 8, 12 (74 S. E. 830); Cobb v. Black, 34 Ga. 162, 166, 167; Hancock v. Kennedy, 22 Ga. App. 144 (95 S. E. 735).
So we reach the conclusion that the court had authority to fine the plaintiff in error not exceeding $300 for his failure to attend court under § 5852 of the Code of 1910; and that if it was necessary in order to secure the attendance of the plaintiff in error at court from that time, and to testify, the court had ample authority to secure his attendance by requiring him to give bail, or, in default thereof, to go to jail. See, in this connection, Constitution of Georgia, art. 1, sec. 1, par. 20 (Civil Code of 1910, § 6376). Civil Code (1910), §§ 4643, 4644.
Judgment reversed.
All the Justices concur.